Do you shut and lock your doors and windows every night before bed? Do you turn off your stove burners? Do you have a password locking your digital accounts, one preferably more complex than “password” or “123456”?

If you answered yes to all three, excellent. Unfortunately, it seems some people still haven’t figured that last one.

SplashData, an Internet security company, has released its latest findings on the most popular passwords on the Internet. It just so happens that “most popular” here also means “worst.”

Using data “compiled from more than 3.3 million leaked passwords during the year,” SplashData had a few interesting findings between 2013 and now.

First, “123456” and “password” still lead the pack.

Second, the top 25 passwords here only account for approximately 2.2 percent of all passwords exposed in 2014.

Third, while some people have stopped using “iloveyou” as their go-to password, they’ve started using “696969” and “batman” instead. So much for romance in the modern era.

In case Internet security is still not a big priority for you, here are some stats. Mary Meeker, Internet analyst for Kleiner Perkins Caufield Byers, noted that more than 95% of networks had been compromised in some way in 2014.

The Honeynet project, a research organization focused on Internet security, published a study that found that between April and December 2000, seven new servers using the Linux Red Hat operating system “were attacked within three days of connecting to the Internet.” The fastest recorded attack on a new system took 15 minutes.

That was in 2000. Fifteen years later, the need for Internet and computer security has only grown.

What we’re trying to say is, change your password. Not sure what to change it to? SplashData’s got some tips:

Don’t use a favorite sport as your password – “baseball” and “football” are in top 10, and “hockey,” “soccer” and “golfer” are in the top 100. Don’t use a favorite team either, as “yankees,” “eagles,” “steelers,” “rangers,” and “lakers” are all in the top 100.

Don’t use your birthday or especially just your birth year — 1989, 1990, 1991, and 1992 are all in the top 100.

While baby name books are popular for naming children, don’t use them as sources for picking passwords. Common names such as “michael,” “jennifer,” “thomas,” “jordan,” “hunter,” “michelle,” “charlie,” “andrew,” and “daniel” are all in the top 50.

If have Internet connection — which I assume you do since you are reading this post on the Internet — and you see your password somewhere in the gallery above, stop reading this and change it right now.

How important is Internet security to you? What steps do you take to protect your data online? Let us know in the comments below.